Word: yahoo
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Wouldn't be any worse? O happy day! Throw in some Street-beating numbers from Alcoa (for the Dow) and some bullish chatter - by analysts on Yahoo and eBay, and by Fed governors about the U.S.' chances of dodging a recession - and the market party was on. Both the Dow and the NASDAQ shot up early and stayed up late, and by day's end the industrials and techs had notched gains of 402 and 146, respectively. (That's 8.9 percent for the currently microscopic NASDAQ, by the way, its third-biggest percentage gain ever...
...course, eBay, which is in many ways the most powerful pure-play Internet force on planet Earth in 2001. It has recently become the top e-commerce destination, growing at a rate of roughly 1 million users per month. While its brethren in the legendary website club (namely Yahoo! and Amazon.com) suffer alarming slowdowns in growth, eBay posts quarter after quarter of stunning profits (its latest: $21 million, an increase of more than 150% on the same period last year...
...determined by the number of buyers and how much they're willing to pay. Haggling is not only mandatory, it's automated. Sales have a deadline; everything must go. And most importantly the quality of the bazaar increases exponentially with its size. There are rival online auction services - Yahoo! and Amazon.com again - but eBay still has the lion's share of the market, about 85%. Put simply, it maintains the lead because it has the lead. If you're a seller, there's nowhere better...
...deep trouble. Zhang of Sohu still believes he and his local rivals can survive. "If Yahoo! goes down, Sohu doesn't necessarily follow," says the entrepreneur, who was so enthused with the Yahoo! model that he originally named his company Sohoo! But most of China's Internet leaders are more pessimistic. The three big portals have limited options: merge, tie up with a Chinese conglomerate or sell out to a global buyer. Disgruntled shareholders may force the issue. At some point, argues Mao, "Shareholders will say, 'That's it, baby. The game is over. You leave. I'm leaving...
...along. Sources say it has held intense negotiations with Beijing's politically well-connected Legend Computer about forming a joint venture that would then snap up Netease. Rumors link Microsoft with Sina. (Spokesmen for Microsoft and AOL deny there are any deals in the works.) Amid all the jockeying, Yahoo!'s plans seem the murkiest. International expansion may no longer be a major priority: many of Yahoo!'s most senior international executives have resigned, among them Savio Chow, managing director of Yahoo! Asia, who tells friends he is now heading to Paris to take French cooking classes...